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FRIENDLY POLICY WILL BE PURSUED New Mexican Ambassador States . o Arrival at Washington | #an Antonlo, Texas, Feb, 12— | Mexico will pursue the same broad, friendly policies that have been in | cffect during hat he | has been in N af- | fairs in Washington, Telles, recently apy dor to the United States, said on his arrlval here, en route to his diplo- matic post in the national capitol. itions have no dee between is all past.”” Tellez 1l und cooperate lliness.” past all p inted ambassa- them- “We serlous problems said. believe vill co In t re. shall be my policy to lems that may confront airly 1 tle tl tinue to as in the two | tric 1 attempt to an and m plomacy coun squarely a he said. “My i to try to the best of the ot , but to extend an effort to adjust all differ- nces to th t at C' n of he n anyth lomat Acting on requ of criminals from the other is a very “Tellez said. “However, tion treaty between the two coun- | tries is in full effect and there | should be no trouble there,” ha sald. “Fortunately, our co is wet, and unfortunately, your country is v, and we are continually worried activitics of smugglers, but this we hope to alleviate in time. Mexico is ready now and been al- ways, to stop these activities where at all possible.” Tellez said Calles’ administration is meeting with much success and that there ars evidences on eve hand of lasting peace and returning prosperit em wee not her fello iests for the return one country to irksome work the extradi- BRINGS SUIT FOR $7,500 FOR INJURIES FROM FALL George Newell Brings Action Against Mrs, Mary D. Poyer B. Over Icy Steps. Suit for $7.500 resulting from a fall on icy steps has been brought by George B. Newell against Mrs. Mary . Poyer of 70 Walnut street, The plaintiff alleges that on Janu- ary 17 the steps of the house at 70 Walnut street owned by Mrs. Poyer were covered with ice and snow rendered dangerous through neg of the defendant fo clean them. Newell, who was a hoarder at the house, claims that ahout 6:45 o'clock on the morning of that day he was descending the steps and that with- out any fault of his own he slipped on the ice and fell down the steps. He alleges that he landed on his side, suffered many ises and | wounds about the right side of his | body, back, shoulders and head, and | sustained fractures of the ninth and | tenth right Desides undergoing mental agony and nervous shoc He claims that he has been confined to his hed since that date and is per- manently injured, being required to expend large medical treat- | et ribs, t sums for Joseph G is ren Woods issued the writ, ahl the superior | iesday of March Winkle rved the which court Constal papers. A. Pizer Katherine $85 damages was issued | by Saul i ¥ and served | by Deputy § H. Horwitz CREWS ACCUSED 0F WET LAW VIOLATION New TLondon Commissioner Post- le Fred Henry and gton for as pones Hearings in Both Cases | Until Thursday | 2. —Crews of s were ar- New London, Feb, two rim running vesse igned at mor: sioner with violat hibition act and were held tinued hearing at 3 o'ciock Thursday afternoon They were Cap George Phillips, Rider of Greenport, L. I., fliary schooner Hattia T tain Otto and Albert Charles W. the customs ere ng hefore 1. 8. Cor Mathewson. lcha nal Earl for co next Johnson o sloop | Semmes, also of Green port. Fifteen hundred dollars h'v"n.t were fixed for th masters, and bonds of $500 for each member of the two erews, Both craft were captured vester- day about two miles oft Ford Po Bay, L. I, by a picket boat frc the Greenport, L. I, coast gu section base No, 3. The Se and the crews of the two vessels were towed to port here and the | Hattie T was retalned at the Green- | port base. Five hundred eases of whiskey were found aboard the Hattls and he Semmes, when seized, had a cargo of about 400 cases of whiskey. PAINTERS HAVE SOCIAT Members of the committes under whose supervision the local painters | ual hanquet rece fal iast night at the Bur-} ritt hotel with about 30 present, Jo- | seph . Fazzino, accordion sololst; | ysmith, planist; Dave | Young, Scotch entertainer; Mrs. t |Frank O, | Tudge T | Memor | Republican elub, |than [wreaths at |the keynote of t | | | | THREE CABINET MEMBERS THERE ,Served With President Lincoln- Atend Celebration Washington, Feb, 12.—~Three mem- |hers of the cabinet were among the |list of honor gucsts and speakers at | birth here today by tt M Lincoln y luncheon given trustees of Lincoln morial unlversit Besldes Secre- es We and Wiibur, oth- ed guests to the gamering' of tribute included ks, Work former Lowden, of bert H, Gary., cness of the Me- ty founded n the hills as a memorial to the rican who himself came h rugged and pure Ameri- can stock as predominates among the mountain folk of the reglon, formed the central theme of speak- ers at the gathering. “It may be," Secretry Work said his ad 88, hat a providence prompted the founding of Lincoln al university for those of the Governor Illinois and morial ennes great Am from su appropri univer s coln and that from among them may later come men who can rule th nation.” of all Lincoln the by his countrymen, former Governor Lowden told the gathering, | |the Memorial university “seems to he the best and most significant of all," for there are “millions of young men and women of ancestry and history | {Iike his own to whom this great in- |stitution gives hope.” Judge Gary, in an address, stress- ed Lincoln’s ingrained honesty as perhaps the dominant quality of his character. Tt was that ahove all else, he said, which placed Lincoln “so firmly in the confidence and af- fection of the people.” NEW YORK HOLDING LINCOLN EXERCISES ‘\‘ar!mu Organizations Take Official | Notice of Birth Anni- versary, New York, Feb. 12.—Tribute was paid to Abraham Lincoln today by thousands at services in various parts of the city by patriotic, re- ligious and civic org tions celebration of his birthday, servance of the anniversary reach its climax this evening at the th annual dinner of the National at whicl ecretary Hughes is to be the principal speak- er. The first services were at the Lin- coln statue in Union Sguare, 20 organizal services, Ob- More these among them Grand Army of the Republic Confederate veterans, Several negro organizations also participated. Wreaths were placed at the of the statue, chments of eailors and marines drew up in military for- mation and gave and colors were massed hefore the statne The busts of Lincoln and the and base calutes 2obert New with of fame at decked exercises s o Yo iversity were formal memorating 60 tween the north com- ye peace be- hich is tion, na ancestry which produced Lin- | memorials erected to in | will | ons took part in | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY OBSERVANCES | Pictorial Reminders OF President Whose Birthday Anniversary It Is ILLINOIS HONORS FORMER PRESIDENT Lincoln Day Observances Are Carried Out Chicago, ¥eb, 12.—Tllinois the state of Abraham Lincoln's adoption his body tribute and where is entombed, to the | paid special today great his 116th | birtha | he most pretentious of |servances were in Chicago w |received the presidential nomi |in 1856 and in Springfield where Ihad practiced law for where The Springfield commemoration lwas held in the state capitol, the | principal speaker being lottie Hol- man O'Neil the only woman Jegisla- tor with more than one term of Ve - fice. Informal emancipator on the ere ob- ion he ceremonies also planned at Lincoln’s massive tomb, Lieut.-General Nelson A. Miles, who at 25 was a major general com- nanding a division in the Union army and knew Lincoln intimately was the central figure of Chicago's observation. He was the guest of honor at a luncheon at noon Wi on the program for the principal ad- i1 REPUBLICANS WROTE NOMINATING - ADDRESS v s s i v o | Others participating ceremonies in Chicago |Gen. Harry C. Hale, comm the sixth corps area; Ma Declares. George Bell, Jr, commander of the | lold ‘Tnirty Third division and for- | By The Associated Press, Gove Joseph W, Fifer, a Chicago, Feb. 12.—Fifty-one ro-|private in the Union army. publicans wrote the speech that| Addison G. Proctor, a nominated Abraham Lincoln, and |from Kansas to the convention t they made a poor job of it, in the nominated Lineoln, was the guest of opinion of Addison G. Proctor, sole |honor at a reception of the Chicago surviving delegate to the Chicago re- | historical society, Descendants {publican national convention at|Chicago men who in 1836 which Lincoln was chosen as the |themsehves into society to arty's presidential candidate | Lincoln for the presidency attended. Mr. Proctor, now in his §ith year, | Tomorrow Sergeant Boggs, the |is here on a lecture tour. only living person who witnessed the | His home is in St. Joseph, Michi- [assassination of President Lincoln, |gan. |will address members of the gxecu- The nominating speech for Lincoln |tives club. S &l « Coim e g WADE PURLIC [Norman E. Judd, a Chicago lawyer, Acknowledgment This photograph (shows the mar- | tyred president shdrtly before his | death. It is said to be the last pic- | ture taken before she assassin's bul- let struck him down. in the And Made Poor Job of it, Survivor Siore Lincoln Convention jor l ot mer nor Mr. Proctor said. We all looked with particular in- terest to that nominating speech, a | Mr. Lincoln’s position before the | convention differed from that of all other candidates,” Mr. Proctor said. “The other candidates had their public records to recommend them, but Lincoln had none. So we anxious to hear what Judd ay in nominating him. “In some respects the nominating speech of Mr. Judd was disapopint- | It seemed to lack cohesion and of Contribution To Abraham Lincoln's Campaign Given To Chicago Socicty Chicago, Feh. 12.—A letter Abraham fincoln, at the time it written a hard-up downstate lawyel in need of funds, has been mada public Ly Miss Tdaletta Campbell of Ralle, it to the Chi- | cago Historical society and had never before heen pub ['The letter, addressed to A. Camp- bell, her father, a friend of Lincoln’s and later congregsman, fol- lows: “In 1857 yon draw on vou coding $300, were of would who s | Tater, Mr. Proctor said, he learned why. The whole affair of Lincoln's nomination was put in the hands of | a commlittee of 50, and when it came to writing the speech, the committee put it in Judd's hands. “They knew he was a sr ' Mr. Proctor sald, not very close gave for any 1 see clearly h oa privilege would be more now than it was then. re that these now than they w write m all events me ority not | that sum t lav still enthusiastic over | aving the whole thing. So | ey arranged that he was to write | it and then submit it to each or ver, fhn ilable “I am aw times are and ey ere A Please years and | were | day's | Major | nding | of | formed | support | he | | | his mortal remains find rest, | | | the fifty, to take out or add onght S necessary, the time they it there do anyt grateful 1ing or not for | whether you can |T shall continue got throngh was not much left of » speech that { ates to the Chicago convention d had heen written by 51 men with onde sed state mphell's the money ¥ oln traveling ahout g the Lincoln-Douglas debaies Tudd's speech ele This is the Penn vlvania state monum memorial by the commonwealth for that gre fought within its confines and marked the tu A R L S 1925, ent on the battlefield of Gettydburg, a fitting atest of Dbattles of the civil war, which was rning point of the great struggle. In this simple western cabin the future liberator first saw the light of day. “DAPPER DON' 0UT OF PRISON NOW Freed by Treaty Terms and Will Return o Paris had ma rles Salamon, and a trio fur- nished the evening's en alnmen* ARRESTED FOR ! Aibin Dressel was arrested t geant Join J. K Walinczus on charges of They becama invo n ment 5t the house whife Dresse packing his fur GRIEF STRIGKEN HE TRIES T0 SHOOT TWO, Hushand of “Diana of HUNDRED MILLION e VEARS AGO VIEWS This I Great Bttt et . Albany Museum Taken to Police Station Dur- ing Funeral, I'eb, Az MAY ISSUE CITY NOTES FOR NEW FIRE STATION Boanl of I'inance And Taxation Will Consider Proposition at Meet- ing Tonight known p seum officials sire to bring but sted per building is « incoln's cction g fora |l exhib ESCAPED ll!“\l \Il|¥|'l ETOWN Stamford, ] g 8 you AL Arc Identical, 10 middle strike were restored yesterday, Dis- ltrict President Rinaldo Cappellini | recedve i the restoration .of _|the char from International rday | presid John 1. who noti- ions &HH']“'HAL‘('IIL\\!’. word of yests Lewis, 's club of Mrs The a L""H of | fled " RARE WIT OF LINGOLN pro- nsisted of i \h'c\l ctions by Year Old Veteran De- r party 10 club next Weil 18 Chicago hes Man As He Knew Him In War Days, 12.—1low Abraham 1 realistic manner, cnabled him to with difficult hu- problems was told today by 1in J. H. Caummings, 82 year old war veteran, in an addre Jtain Cummins was special mes- nger to President Lincoln from the General Irvin Me- r with his wit Iy headquarters of Dowel d the' who e1 outhreak grumbling and The took up the probiem per- the regiments most dissatis- a0 s and of story of the listed for of the war eir hreats. president sonally wit riously broken mora 1 while visiting the Sherman troops along General . a captain ap- hed the president and said Sherman threatened to t Mr. President.” and on the cap- and said t him myse neral his men as 1, thought " said it ,»y,l are wit | Jlitics in such a | listinguish r met. nee him from ers 11 1 never v him smile ove hut Would Return P;(;;el'i y ()f Aliens Seized by U. S. | Feb, 12 bill fdent to glor to to by turn property seized custodian R was Pmston \Ime l nions Have Charter: Reslmed Scrante I IS TOLD IN STORIES | of | aftected with homesickness | le, Cummings said, A FEELING OF SECURITY You naturally feel secure when you know that the medicing you are about to take is absolutely pure and contains no harmful or habit pro- ducing drugs, Such a medicine 1s Dr, Kilmer's Swamp-Root, kidney, liver and blad- der medicine, The same standard of purity, strength and excellence is maintaine ed in every bottle of Swamp-Root, It is scientifically compounded from vegetable herbs, It §s not a stimulant and is lnk«‘!‘l in teaspoonful doscs. It 18 not recommended for every= thing. It is natur great helper in ree lHeving and overcoming kidney, liver and bladder troubles. A sworn statement with every bottle of Swamp-Root, If you need a medicine; you should have the best, On sale ut all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and ldrge. However, if you wish first to this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing- hamton, N . for a sample bottle, When writing be > and mention this paper. RED PINPLES [ICHED BADLY Neck and Chest Broken Qut. Cuticura Healed. “ My daughter's neck and chest were very badly broken out with red pimples that festered and itched badly. She scratched the affected parts and caused the trouble to spread. At night she ‘could not sleop and the breaking out caused disfigurement. I tried everything I could think of but nothing helped her, I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I purchased more, and af- ter using ore cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment she was healed.” (Signed) Mrs. R. B. Cross, 81 Scneca Parkway, ;| Rochester, N. Y. Use Cuticura to clear yuur skin. Soup 2. Ointment2% and 0. Talcom She Bold Seoars Liboratert, Dept. B, Maides, Maoa' 3%~ Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. Try This New Way To Take Castor 0il Everyone Should nkr Castor Ol Once in a While of is Dr. purity Kilm try su. at last stor oil confe and A very clever chemist has ceeded in putting pure c into a delightful chocolate tion and now, men, women children just love to it Druggists call this new discove Kastor Jems and they surcly are gems for you can't taste a trace of the oil or smell it either. When child cats one Kastor Jem he takes exactly dose of pure castor oil and unless you tell him, he won't know it. Castor medicine one Ol is a wonderful bowel and many people take it regularly—in the form of Kastor Jems it is a pleasure to take—Adults shounld take two. Ask your druggist for a package— He knows all about them. Women Who Age All welcome to this test By Edna Wallace Hopper At a grandmother's age, I my youthful bloom and The thousands who see me the stug look 19, That | Youth Clay | Keep contours, dally on nd eleewhere know that 1 due to f and one is s kcicnce is my White type clay, lainty. It is the crude and muddy ny have cmploye combines ind - white [§ nd | White of white, thing ything clays 80 with' other ays are clean dainty appli- result of 20 Vo clay This the final ientific study. Youth Clay purges the 11l that clogs and mars it. 1 | moves the causes of black] | blemishes. It draws the bl skin to nourish and revive it result s a terglow amazes and ‘ 1t Yombat | veduer is od to the The rosy a which ights. all lines an arged pores. 1 wrinkles, Many wom- ars with a to drop ten ye application is a bea e can look her keep her youth. In found a with ¢ | en seem single Clay sential. No st without it, all the ages help to | woman | beauty made inviting. added hdlpa. ¥ you may have yourself a test of | Now clay is 1t is | made to combine Whatever other c tried, you owe this new type Edna Wallace | Youth Clay and t But my free if White 1l drug- and [ off cend you & | tri you will mail coupon. | t show what it does. | — Trial Tube Free Edra Wallace Hopper, $36 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago. T want to try White Youth Clay. Hopper's is supplied by $1 counters e will